Wednesday, February 21, 2018

Fast Fully Homomorphic Evaluation of Neural Networks in the Cloud

In order for Fully Homomorphic Encryption (FHE) to be deployed in real-world applications, still today --- even if a theoretical solution has been around for almost 10 years --- it is required to increase the efficiency of used algorithms. As the interactions of parameters and components of nowadays lattice-based realizations of FHE are non-trivial, schemes once set up to meet a multitude of design constraints, often end up having high requirements. Too high for some "killer"-application as run-times may pose a prohibitive hurdle.

In this blog-post, I'd like to present a use-case where an Fully Homomorphic Encryption (FHE) scheme achieves unprecedentedly fast classification of encrypted data, and makes scale-invariant homomorphic evaluation of neural networks (NN) possible.

Are privacy-preserving services in the Cloud relevant?

At this point, I think, I can skip philosophizing about the ubiquitous utility of machine learning, as we can see its impact everyday all around us. On the other hand the quest for privacy-preserving application of machine learning algorithms to user data is becoming a central topic of discussions recently. It is expected that the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), a result of the call for European law (which could serve as paragon internationally) to protect its citizens, its economy, will push forward innovation in this direction too.

Simply put, users of Machine Learning as a Service (MLaaS) in the Cloud, want to only share & upload encrypted images as input to the companies' powerful, pre-trained cognitive models.

Clearly, encrypting content ensures data confidentiality, assuming the associated private key of the public-key encryption scheme never leaves the user’s trusted device. (As a side note; recent news reports suggest that such an assumption for user controlled devices are not always guaranteed. The Cloud operating on FHE encrypted data on the other hand is not possibly vulnerable to leak private user data through the whole class of cache attacks, i.e. Meltdown and Spectre.)

Let's briefly look at the problem setting.

To overcome conflicting interests of confidentiality and utility of data in the Cloud-based scenario, Fully Homomorphic Encryption can help the user to receive a useful answer to their encrypted question in a privacy-preserving way. Hence, the cloud needs to support homomorphic computations on the FHE encrypted inputs and send back the still encrypted result of this delegated operation in a reasonable time. In principal, only the legitimate user can decrypt the output using their secret key. The cloud service cannot deduce information from the random looking inputs, intermediate or final results, but can still charge the user for providing the service, e.g. classifying an image in this example.

Let's briefly look at the task.

First step when approaching a solution of how to use FHE for NN is defining minimal requirements of the concrete task and knowing what can be considered practical FHE.
We want to showcase fast homomorphic evaluation of a pre-trained NN to classify a depicted shape without leaking privacy of the input data at an 80 [bit] security level, e.g. images of handwritten digits from the MNIST dataset.
The output, given in less than two seconds, shall be encrypted scores assigned to each possible output and the highest score, decrypted by the user, is the most probable label of the input image.

A depiction of how input is propagated in order to evaluate a
discretized deep neural networks with an arbitrary depth $d$ of hidden
layers to arrive at a classification. Each neuron performs operations
$f_i$; a function linearly depending on values of the incoming wires and
weights followed by a non-linear operations. The latter is typically
referred to as ``activation''.

As deep neural networks with $d$ hidden layers give good results in practice, we target this type with a scale-invariant FHE scheme.

Let's look at the problem solution.

In an attempt to bringing forth FHE in practice, our C++ code builds on top of an existing Fast Fully Homomorphic Encryption Library over the Torus (TFHE) and introduces a new framework for homomorphic evaluation.

To increase the efficiency, which is an important step paving the way to practicality, the underlying FHE scheme needs to be parametrized once for a given network.
Secondly, a security analysis is another crucial step in vetting the algorithms, ensuring their use maturely resists state-of-the-art cryptanalysis and fulfills the targeted security level.

The main capability of our scheme is that when evaluating a single neuron, the output value can readily be used for the next operation as it is bootstrapped to ensure low error propagation.

Close-up on a single neuron.

We apply the activation function directly to the weighted sum of inputs according to the network's wires, i.e. computing $y = f(x) = sign( \langle x, w\rangle )$, with fixed weights for the neuron and sign as activation.

Scale-invariance means that privacy-preserving evaluation of deep neural networks do not longer pose a hurdle, as computations carried out by every neuron in the network is independent of the total number of neurons and layers and hence scales linearly.

With this approach, we can report the performance result of an experiment to classify 10000 encrypted images from the MNIST dataset with more than 96% accuracy on average taking less than 1.7 seconds, using the TFHE library as a starting point.

Running an experiment on a trained neural net with 784:100:10--topology deployed in the Cloud.

An uploaded encrypted test image is input to the homomorphic evaluation of our scheme that classifies a depicted shape (without leaking privacy of the input data). The evaluation of the neural network outputs the encrypted scores $S_i$ assigned to each digit $i$. The highest score, decrypted by the user, is the most probable label of their image.

I'd like to stress that the good performance of this scale-able approach is not limited to homomorphic evaluation of neural networks with one hidden layer, as depicted above, but can be applied to deep neural networks, that in practice could be composed of possibly a hundred hidden layers or an even broader class of cognitive models.

For a detailed, formal description I refer to the full version of the paper or you may try out the proof-of-concept implementation code, available online that shows how to obtain these research results, applying our generic framework to a trained NN and MNIST dataset inputs as a demonstration.

Let's look at directions for future work and open-questions.

Finally, mentioning limits on the functionality of our FHE scheme, and pointing out the applicability to other well-specified domains rounds off this treatment here.

To comfort a potential concern for the service providers that their users might be sending malicious requests, to evaluate private networks with our framework is not dealt with at the moment, although it is in principal possible.
They could either try to learn the company's intellectual property (the weights and the topology of the neural network itself), or try to derive sensitive information encoded therein (which could be a breach into the privacy of the training dataset).
In this latter case a statistical databases studied in the differential privacy literature can be used in the training phase.

An open question is how further performance gains can be achieved by refining the algorithms. Also listing all general cognitive models that are possible is interesting.

So long, stay tuned for faster solutions and more general demonstrations!

ECRYPT.EU

European Commission

This project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 643161 and under CSA grant agreement No. 645421.